The People's Choice: Exploring the Role of Collective Leader Endorsement in Dynamic Leadership Relationships
2018
Grounded in the relational view of leadership, this
dissertation explores the dynamics of the leader/follower
relationship in the context of a collective using a social networks
approach. Specifically, I build on DeRue and Ashford’s (2010) work
that focuses on dynamic, socially constructed leadership
relationships within a dyad to focus on such relationships within a
collective. In doing so, I conceptualize collective leader
endorsement – receiving a grant of leader identity from a
collective of followers – and examine the implications of
collective leader endorsement. As a dynamic relationship,
collective leader endorsement can change as individuals give and
receive grants of leader identity. I draw on relational models of
leadership theory and appraisal theory to examine how contextual
situations (i.e., identity jolts) prompt change in collective
leader endorsement at the network level and how such change can
influence individual functioning at the individual level. As a
socially constructed relationship, collective leader endorsement
creates the potential for disagreement among members of the
collective regarding grants of leader identity. I draw on social
comparison theory and appraisal theory to suggest that agreement
(or lack thereof) can influence the individual’s perceived demands
and overall functioning within the collective. Using data from 106
individuals on a collegiate football team in the United States over
12 consecutive weeks, I find significant changes in collective
leader endorsement and the associated leadership network over the
course of the season. Specifically, I find that challenging
situations prompted a reevaluation of leader identities and shifted
the patterns within the leadership network. In addition, change in
an individual’s level of collective leader endorsement prompted
additional perceived demands and lowered well-being. This
relationship was attenuated if the individual had a supportive
coach to help him cope with additional leadership demands. Finally,
(lack of) agreement regarding the individual’s leader identity also
influenced the individual’s well-being. Specifically, the
individual experienced enhanced perceived demands (and associated
lower well-being) if the individual’s perception of who should
receive grants of leader identity was incongruent with the
collective’s perception of collective leader
endorsement.
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